One of Sarapu's opponents at the 1949
Oldenburg tournament was former New Zealander
Robert Wade; in a conversation after their game, Wade suggested that New Zealand would be a good place for someone like Sarapu, who wanted to escape war-ravaged Europe. He met Barbara Bialonczyk after the Oldenburg tournament, and they married in 1950. Immediately thereafter, the newlyweds emigrated to New Zealand, arriving in
Wellington in October 1950. They had one son, Peter. On the Sarapus' arrival, there was a huge gap in chess strength between him and the rest. His strength helped raise the general standard of chess in New Zealand. Even so, he won or shared the
New Zealand Chess Championship 20 times between 1952, when he won his first championship with 10.5 points out of 11 games, and 1990, when he tied with
Ben Martin at 7.5 out of 11. Sarapu claimed that this was a
world record number of wins of any national championship. In New Zealand he became known as "Mr Chess", and represented the country at ten
Chess Olympiads. In 1952 he played
C. J. S. Purdy, then champion of Australia, for the championship of Australasia. The match, played at Auckland, was drawn, the players becoming joint champions for 1952. Sarapu took first place at the Melbourne International Tournament in 1955. ==Honours and awards==